Should the ACCC’s chairman or its commissioners be able to leave their government position on Friday and start work a week later with a consulting firm advising clients on competition law matters?

Get thee to the veggie patch, Graeme Samuel. Photo: John Roger Palmour.

It’s a good question and not as hypothetical as you may think.

Why? Well, in the dying days of Graeme Samuel’s tenure as ACCC Chairman he announced that shortly after leaving the ACCC he would be joining a “boutique corporate advisory firm.” There Samuel would no doubt be called on to boost the firm’s corporate deal making profile.

One would expect Samuel to advise clients on mergers, as well as providing advice on other corporate deals while at the firm.

Inevitably merger and other corporate deals raise competition law issues. Here it gets interesting as Samuel has intimate knowledge of the ACCC and its processes.

That’s extremely valuable knowledge to any party involved in a merger deal. That knowledge, however, puts Samuel in a very difficult position.

While Samuel would obviously be mindful of the potential for conflicts of interest and would naturally be putting in place processes to manage those possibilities, his quick move to a corporate advisory firm has raised eyebrows amongst some competition law heavyweights.

Even journalists who have generally been supportive of Samuel’s approach at the ACCC wrote pieces raising some obvious questions about the move.

Do you think it’s appropriate for an outgoing ACCC Chairman to announce that a week or two after he leaves he will be joining a corporate advisory firm that has existing or future clients that may need competition law advice?

Your answer will in many ways depend on whether you think that joining the corporate advisory firm places the outgoing ACCC Chairman in a situation where there is an actual or perceived conflict of interest.

Of course, conflicts of interest must not only be avoided in practice, but it’s perhaps more critical that any appearance of potential conflicts of interests is also avoided.

Avoiding an appearance of a potential conflict of interest is much harder as a government regulator, such as Samuel, would have accumulated an “insider’s view” of the government agency.

That knowledge is embedded in one’s mind and cannot easily be quarantined from one’s general thinking on the competition issues that may affect clients of the corporate advisory firm.

So while Samuel could at the advisory firm easily excuse himself from particular matters that were considered by the ACCC during his time there, there will other deals not previously considered by the ACCC but where his knowledge of ACCC’s internal processes could help successfully guide a client through those processes.

And what about the friendships that Samuel may have developed with particular ACCC staff members who may in future be involved in reviewing matters concerning one of Samuel’s new clients? One would imagine that Samuel would exclude himself in such curly situations, but one could also imagine that such situations leave him constantly looking over his shoulders.

So while avoiding actual conflicts of interest may be manageable, avoiding an appearance of potential conflicts of interest will be challenging in practice. That’s why ex-regulators typically go on what’s called “gardening leave” .

At its simplest, that’s where the person takes an extended break from any advisory work directly or indirectly related to the person’s previous regulatory position. Some may take up academic positions or undertake community or other unrelated work.

Most take the view that it’s far easier to do unrelated work than having to constantly look over one’s shoulders regarding actual or potential conflicts of interest. In some instances, the person may even be compelled to take gardening leave by the person’s contract or a relevant piece of legislation.

In fact, gardening leave is increasingly been required of, for example, partners at law firms when they leave the firm. Essentially, gardening leave is concerned to ensure that a person is unable to use any confidential information gained in a previous role for personal or financial gain.

For an ex-regulator gardening leave would be about avoiding awkward situations where questions may arise about actual or potential conflicts of interest.

Here the issue is whether it’s in the public interest to prevent an ex-regulator from moving straight into a private role that is directly or indirectly related to the person’s previous regulatory position. Interestingly, some ex-regulators have themselves been quite strident in suggesting that gardening leave should be required for ex-regulators.

One former ACCC Chairman, for example, has been reported as saying that the Federal Government should act on the issue

It’s not only ex-regulators that should be considered for gardening leave. Former Government advisers should also be considered, as should senior ex-bureaucrats. These people will all have had access to sensitive information and government networks which leaves them open to an actual or perceived conflict of interest.

Avoiding such risks is not only important for the individual involved, but also from a public interest point of view. In particular, there is a need to avoid any community perception that the individual may be profiting or otherwise benefiting from their time as a regulator, government adviser or bureaucrat.

In short, the individual involved should refrain for a certain period of time from engaging in any activity in which an actual or perceived conflict of interest may arise.

This period could vary between 3 and 12 months depending on the seniority of the individual, with the clear implication that an ACCC Chairman, senior Ministerial advisor, or Departmental head should go on gardening leave for a 12 month period following the end of their tenure.

For these individuals a 12 month period of gardening leave should be included in their terms of appointment. A further requirement could be that there is a limit on the term that such an individual can serve in the senior position.

For example, the ACCC Chairman should only be allowed to serve a single maximum term of 5 years. That would act to limit the person’s access to confidential information to a defined period of service which could then be quarantined to some degree by a 12 month period of gardening leave.

While some ex-regulators will undertake self-imposed gardening leave, it’s clear that different individuals take different approaches to the ethical issues surrounding actual or perceived conflicts of interest and, as a result, the public interest requires that a consistent benchmark regarding gardening leave be applied to all ex-regulators or ex-bureaucrats.

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10 comments

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    • graham says:

      11:01pm | 17/08/11

      Evidence of wrongdoing should be the only basis for any form of punishment or deprivation. Peter Rieth, for whom I have no time is no different to G.S. or Bob Carr or anyone else in regard to this matter. To assume that Fred or Bill or Mary will take advantage of their position for monetary gain goes against the very keystone of our legal system—the presumption of innocence.
      The insignificant short poppies will always try to point at successful people in this country with accusative derision because thay have “made it”, an accomplishment which the runty, talentless, lazy weeds are unable to comprehend as anything but “they must have had inside help”, or ” it’s not what you know, but who you know”. 
      My father, a moderately well off bloke, used to tell me that the harder he worked the luckier he got. G.S. and all of the others mentioned above, (even including the horrible Howard) should be allowed to undertake any career they choose. After all, if I spend my young life in banking, or stockbroking or horse training, I am permitted to bring my experience into play for advancement purposes, am I not? Aren’t I expected to use my contacts to advantage my employers position? The very reason Dick gets the position over Ted is because Dick knows more about the business, has better contacts, more value.
      Burn ‘em at the stake if they do something illegal, but taking advantage? If that were truly the case then Coles’s buying power would be judged illegal means for driving less cashed-up, less well-contacted, less savvy small businesses to the wall. But it’s not, it’s simply business. We don’t like it, we may resent it, and many envy it, but it is just that—business.
      And a years absence is a token objection anyway. Who loses all contacts in a year. The year is taken up making contacts and cementing relationships. Businesses thrive by planning for next year, and all the sour grapes at another’s success won’t change that one whit.

    • Don King says:

      02:36pm | 17/08/11

      I have to disagree with you here.

      Would you say that a prosecutor should not be able to become a defense attorney without gardening leave? That they understand the internal working of the prosecutor’s office?

      Competition Law is a legitimate field and the ‘inside’ knowledge obtained from working for the ACCC should be fairly common knowledge for those in this field. The ACCC should not have opaque requirements and past behaviour of investigations and merger refusals will exhibit the office’s attitudes and tolerance for these deals. If there were COI issues regarding specific cases where Samuels had inside knowledge obtained from his previous employment then obviously he would have a responsibility to abstain from the investigation.

      Gardening leave is used within the private sector in order to retain clients when their contact switches firms and to generally discourage company swapping. Neither of these factors are relevant for this type of public service. If somebody with strong business credentials wishes to perform a public service such as this for a (relative) pittance, they should not be punished with a year in limbo. Most people in this position would prefer a year in a coma than a year in academia.

    • Highly Popular Policy Free Liberals Nationals says:

      01:45pm | 17/08/11

      Wasn’t Graeme Samuel a Liberal Party Heavyweight once soon as the Howard Government was elected in 1996???

    • stephen says:

      11:34am | 17/08/11

      When G.S. first took the reins if the ACCC he said that he wanted to do public service, as a way of returning favours to the consumer.
      What I didn’t know then was that he still had his money in companies, i.e. DFO and others as investments. (Competition would have benefitted himself more than the average investor.)
      Assuming he was paid a wage as Chairman of ACCC, where is the ‘public Service’ he so valiantly claimed as his right ?

    • Tomz says:

      10:33am | 17/08/11

      Bob Carr walked straight into the MacQuarie Bank.

    • Terry says:

      10:26am | 17/08/11

      JIM J all the security of a public sector position and all the money of a big consultant…

      Except, of course, they don’t have any security, they have chosen a fast buck over a long term, secure, career.  They don’t get any holiday pay, sick pay, or any other perks associated with secure employment, and with any down turn they are the first to be eliminated.  They also have no real accountability, its a good way for local government agencies to avoid responsibility.

    • JIM J says:

      08:58am | 17/08/11

      Here in Queensland this sort of behaviour is completely normal through most of the public sector.  Some build there networks and then become a consultant to sell back the knowledge that the taxpayers invested in them while others come straight back in as contractors to fill the same seat at 2-3times the money.  If you walk through the halls of some agencies you will find dozens of people who are actually contractors (some for 5-7 years) handing out business cards that say they are departmental staff.  I am aware of a recent instance where an employee left on a friday and was back at exactly the same desk the following Monday but now as a consultant.

      If the same thing was happening in a third world country we would call it corruption.  But in this country most people just wish it was them (all the security of a public sector position and all the money of a big consultant)

    • meh says:

      08:55am | 17/08/11

      Samuals was already a very wealthy businessman before he joined ACCC and has been able to distance himself from conflicts of interest. He is probably one of the very few who I think is honerable enough to not need a gardening leave, but on the general level the concept is a good one.

      I would extend it to gov ministers land senior beurocrats ike Perter Reith joining Tenex on retiring from heading up the defence ministry.

    • stephen says:

      04:37pm | 17/08/11

      Yes he does appear honourable, agreed.
      His appointment by John Howard, knowing that G.S. was a merchant Banker, may have been unwise.
      And Tenex has a number of Government Defence contracts, I think.
      Probably a good thing that knowledgable people get good jobs in the private sector.
      It is however, that some, after making a fortune and contacts privately, then become government employed ; I think that is the problem.

    • The righteous one says:

      08:10am | 17/08/11

      And who supports the ex’s while they are forced to withdraw from the labour market?  For positions such as chair of the ACCC there would have need to have been related knowledge before taking up the position.  Having said that, are we to demand that previous skills cannot be used as well because they may have been influenced by the tenure at the ACCC or some such body?

      Tthere is an expectation on all public officers to act with probity and integrity, but is this indeed enforeable after seperation?  I think not.  We just rely on personal integrity.  Some have displayed it others have’nt

 

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